VI. YE brood of Conscience - Spectres! that fre quent The bad man's restless walk, and haunt his bed Fiends in your aspect, yet beneficent cent 5 Slow be the Statutes of the land to share good In the full might they hitherto have shown, Survive not Judgment that requires his own? VII. BEFORE the world had past her time of youth break, Strong as could then be borne. A Master 5 meek Proscribed the spirit fostered by that rule, Patience his law, long-suffering his school, And love the end, which all through peace must seek. But lamentably do they err who strain His mandates, given rash impulse to control 10 VIII. FIT retribution, by the moral code Determined, lies beyond the State's embrace, Of wrongful acts. Downward it is and broad, 5 And, the main fear once doomed to banishment, Far oftener then, bad ushering worse event, Blood would be spilt that in his dark abode Crime might lie better hid. And, should the change Take from the horror due to a foul deed, 10 IX. THOUGH to give timely warning and deter Far higher, else full surely shalt thou err. To which her judgments reverently defer. 5 Speaking through Law's dispassionate voice the State Endues her conscience with external life The grovelling mind, the erring to recall, 10 Χ. Our bodily life, some plead, that life the shrine Of an immortal spirit, is a gift May not avail, nor prayer have for God's ear lift For earthly sight. "Eternity and Time" They urge, "have interwoven claims and rights Not to be jeopardised through foulest crime: 11 The sentence rule by mercy's heaven-born lights." Even so; but measuring not by finite sense ΧΙ. Ан, think how one compelled for life to abide 5 In life-long exile on a savage coast, Whose goodness knows no change, whose love is sure, Who sees, foresees; who cannot judge amiss, And wafts at will the contrite soul to bliss. ΧΙΙ. SEE the Condemned alone within his cell Heaven Does in this change exceedingly rejoice; ΧΙΙΙ. CONCLUSION. YES, though He well may tremble at the sound Of his own voice, who from the judgment-seat Sends the pale Convict to his last retreat In death; though Listeners shudder all around, They know the dread requital's source profound; 5 Nor is, they feel, its wisdom obsolete- rod, But leave it thence to drop for lack of use: XIV. APOLOGY. THE formal World relaxes her cold chain For One who speaks in numbers; ampler scope His utterance finds; and, conscious of the gain, Imagination works with bolder hope beats 5 Against all barriers which his labour meets flowed Patience, with trust that, whatsoe'er the way Each takes in this high matter, all may move Cheered with the prospect of a brighter day. |